US veteran reunites with English wartime girlfriend after 71 years in Australia

Norwood Thomas, a 93-year-old former paratrooper, flew to Adelaide to meet
with Joyce Morris, 88, who hugged him, saying: “Well, you’re still vertical”

By Jonathan Pearlman, Sydney, video source Air New Zealand Handout

12:52PM GMT 10 Feb 2016

An English woman has been reunited with her American wartime lover for the first time in 71 years after he flew to Australia to meet her.

Greeting her former boyfriend with a hug and kiss in a hotel room in Adelaide, Joyce Morris, 88, said: “Well, you’re still vertical”.

"Give me a squeeze," he responded. Before their encounter, he admitted that he was "a little nervous"

Norwood Thomas, holds up a photo of Joyce Morris at his home in Virginia Beach

Mrs Morris first met Norwood Thomas, a former paratrooper from Virginia, by the Thames in London in 1944 but their short-lived romance was interrupted by the war.

He was dispatched to fight in the Battle of Normandy but later wrote to her from the United States, saying she should join him and “make my house a home”. But she misunderstood the invitation, thinking that he was already married and intended to leave his wife for her.

Norwood Thomas talks with Joyce Morris via Skype

She refused his offer and the two went their separate ways. Both married and had children. She moved with her husband to Adelaide in Australia and was divorced after 30 years; his wife died more than a decade ago.

Last year, Mrs Morris asked her son to try to find him on the internet and the couple was able to talk on Skype after discovering a story about Mr Thomas going skydiving on his 88th birthday.

An online crowdfunding campaign raised enough money for him to fly out to see her and Air New Zealand offered free first-class flights for Mr Thomas and Steve, his son and carer.

Mr Thomas describes Joyce as the one that got away Photo: 13NewsNow

When the couple was finally reunited, he fell into her arms and they hugged. Mrs Morris was just 18 when they last saw each other.

“We’ll have a wonderful fortnight,” she said.

“To find somebody who loves you and you love them, in the latter years of your life, it would rather be special, wouldn’t it?”

Mr Thomas said: “This is about the most wonderful thing that could have happened to me.”

During their Skype conversation, Mr Thomas told her: "I tell you what. If you had come to the States when I asked, we would have been together for 70 years."

He remembered the teenager as a "pretty little thing" and told The Virginian-Pilot before flying out of the US: "Joyce was special; the one that got away. But after the war, my orders to go home came so quick there was no real chance to even say goodbye."

Norwood Thomas (centre) during his days in the army

He added: “I’d rather die travelling to Australia than live sitting around at home wondering ‘what if?’”.